Adjective Endings: Knickerbocker Trick
Detailed and easy shortcut for definite-article adjective endings in German.
Visual Memory Map (CSS)
This CSS diagram replaces the image and shows the pants-zone logic directly.
Blue cells are inside the pants zone (mostly -e), amber cells are outside (always -en), and the red cell is the masculine Akkusativ exception.
The Rule In Plain Language
With definite articles (der, die, das), adjective endings become easy with this shortcut:
- Inside the pants: mostly -e.
- Main exception: masculine Akkusativ uses -en (den guten Mann).
- Outside the pants: Dativ, Genitiv, and Plural are always -en.
Definite Article Adjective Endings Table
| Case | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominativ | der + -e | die + -e | das + -e | die + -en |
| Akkusativ | den + -en | die + -e | das + -e | die + -en |
| Dativ | dem + -en | der + -en | dem + -en | den + -en |
| Genitiv | des + -en | der + -en | des + -en | der + -en |
Shortcut: If case is Dativ or Genitiv, or if noun is plural, use -en without overthinking.
Quick Pattern Drill
Nominativ
der alte Mann, die neue Tasche, das kleine Kind
Mostly -e in singular.
Akkusativ
den alten Mann, die neue Tasche, das kleine Kind
Masculine changes to -en.
Dativ
dem alten Mann, der neuen Tasche, dem kleinen Kind
All -en.
Genitiv
des alten Mannes, der neuen Tasche, des kleinen Kindes
All -en on adjective.
Plural (Any Case)
die alten Haeuser, mit den alten Haeusern
Plural with definite article uses -en.
One-Line Cheat Code
If you see Dativ, Genitiv, or Plural, choose -en. For Nominativ/Akkusativ singular, think pants and use mostly -e.